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J Appl Physiol 98: 518-525, 2005; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00248.2004
8750-7587/05 $8.00
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Infants with univentricular heart have reduced heart rate and blood pressure responses to side motion and altered responses to head-up tilt

Turkka Kirjavainen, Suvi Viskari, Olli Pitkänen, and Eero Jokinen

Hospital for Children and Adolescents, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

Submitted 9 March 2004 ; accepted in final form 20 August 2004

Cardiovascular control was studied in infants with univentricular heart (UVH). Side motion tests and 45-s 45° head-up tilt tests were performed in 11 control and 9 UVH infants at the age of 13 ± 3.2 wk. In addition, heart rate (HR) reactions to spontaneous arousals and HR variability during slow-wave sleep (SWS) were determined. All UVH infants had been hypoxic for several weeks, and during the sleep study the mean arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation was 82 ± 5%. Tests were done at night during SWS, confirmed by polysomnographic recording. Continuous beat-to-beat blood pressure (BP) was measured. In the side-motion tests, control infants consistently showed a transient increase in HR and BP. This response was markedly reduced in all of the UVH infants (P < 0.0001). In tilt tests, the UVH infants showed normal BP responses, but, although a sustained 2.0% decrease in HR was observed in the controls, the UVH infants presented with a sustained 2.6% mean HR increase (P = 0.005). The UVH infants also showed attenuated HR acceleration during spontaneous arousals (P = 0.01), but HR variability did not differ significantly from the controls. In conclusion, UVH infants with chronic hypoxia exhibit defective vestibulosympathetic pathways, as expressed by an absence of acute HR and BP reactivity to side motion. HR reactions to postural challenge and spontaneous arousal are also altered. Autonomic function abnormalities in these infants are suggested to be secondary to hypoxia.

autonomic function; heart defects; congenital; hypoxia; sudden infant death



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: T. Kirjavainen, Hospital for Children and Adolescents, P. O. Box 281, 00029 HUS, Finland (E-mail: turkka.kirjavainen{at}hus.fi)







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